I. Mendes, J. Lübbers, J. Schönfeld, A. Baldermann, A. R. Carrasco, A. Cravo, A. Gomes, P. Grasse, F. M. Stamm
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
One recently proposed approach to reduce atmospheric CO2 concentrations is marine alkalinity enhancement. This technique increases the CO2 uptake capacity of seawater through weathering of fine-grained (mafic) rocks and minerals in marine environments. The weathering process has been extensively tested in laboratory studies and verified by numerical models. Field experiments scaling the CO2 uptake under natural conditions are still lacking. In a methodological approach, a novel in situ experiment was designed and installed in a salt marsh at Ria Formosa coastal lagoon, southern Portugal. The experiment comprised deployments of different sizes of olivine and basalt substrates, and a control site, which were tidally submerged twice a day. A monthly monitoring scheme of supernatant and porewater properties from each deployment and control site was established, and procedures for temperature, salinity, oxygen, pH, total alkalinity, nutrient, and trace metal analyses were defined. This paper is devoted to the methods and describes the design, a protocol for the analyses, and an evaluation of experimental performance and reliability. Data from the first 6 months are presented for validation of the experiment. They demonstrated elevated total alkalinity in water samples, mostly in porewater after the deployments, while salinity, oxygen, and pH reflect the control conditions. Significant alkalinity differences were observed between the treatments and the natural background conditions monitored at the control site, during the 6 months of the experiment. The methodological approach is presented with strengths, limitations, and recommendations for an upscaling as CO2 removal measure, servicing, and subsequent investigations.
期刊介绍:
JGR-Biogeosciences focuses on biogeosciences of the Earth system in the past, present, and future and the extension of this research to planetary studies. The emerging field of biogeosciences spans the intellectual interface between biology and the geosciences and attempts to understand the functions of the Earth system across multiple spatial and temporal scales. Studies in biogeosciences may use multiple lines of evidence drawn from diverse fields to gain a holistic understanding of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems and extreme environments. Specific topics within the scope of the section include process-based theoretical, experimental, and field studies of biogeochemistry, biogeophysics, atmosphere-, land-, and ocean-ecosystem interactions, biomineralization, life in extreme environments, astrobiology, microbial processes, geomicrobiology, and evolutionary geobiology